From Pine View Farm

2011 archive

Collateral Brain Damage 0

Every since Operation “Odyssey Dawn” started, this song has been stuck in my head.

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Make TWUUG Your LUG 0

Learn about the wonderful world of free and open source.

Tidewater Unix Users Group

What: Monthly TWUUG Meeting.

Who: Everyone in TideWater/Hampton Roads with interest in any/all flavors of Unix/Linux. There are no dues or signup requirements. All are welcome.

Where: Lake Taylor Transitional Care Hospital in Norfolk-Employee Cafeteria. See directions below. (Wireless and wired internet connection available.)

When: 7:30 PM till whenever (usually 9:30ish) on Thursday, April 7.

Directions:
Lake Taylor Hospital
1309 Kempsville Road
Norfolk, Va. 23502 (Map)

Pre-Meeting Dinner at 6:00 PM (separate checks)
Uno Chicago Grill
Virginia Beach Blvd. & Military Highway (Janaf Shopping Center). (Map)

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Breaking up, the polite way:

A Montgomery County veterinarian charged with killing his pregnant girlfriend bought the gun used in the slaying just five days beforehand, court records say.

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Your Tax Dollars at Work 0

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QOTD 0

Samuel Johnson:

All the arguments which are brought to represent poverty as no evil show it evidently to be a great evil.

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And Now for Something Completely Different 0

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Spill Here, Spill Now 0

What Brendan said.

Also, questions surround the filming of Buccaneer Petroleum, the Sequel:

US interior secretary Ken Salazar has rejected claims that BP has reached an agreement to restart drilling for oil in the Gulf of Mexico.

Media reports have said that the UK oil giant will resume work in July at 10 sites in the Gulf.

Mr Salazar told reporters on Monday: “There is no such agreement, nor would there be such an agreement.”

But BBC business editor Robert Peston understands BP has been told privately it should be able to resume soon.

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The Republican Thought Police 0

Bill Maxwell considers their tactics. A nugget:

Many professors and most legal scholars say that Wisconsin’s GOP and the think tanks have a right to request Cronon’s e-mails through FOIA. I agree. The problem is that the reason given for the requests — protecting the interests of taxpayers — is disingenuous at best. Clearly, the aim of conservatives, with ammunition provided by their favored think tanks, is to muzzle professors.

On the Media also covers the story. From their website:

The Wisconsin GOP has filed an open records request for the e-mails of University of Wisconsin Professor William Cronon . Cronon and others say the GOP is trying to silence his criticism of the labor dispute in WI. The GOP says the request is perfectly legal and they need not explain what they intend to do with the e-mails. We wanted to ask a FOIA expert to weigh in. RCFP’s Lucy Dalglish explains that the law is on the GOP’s side.

Follow the link to listen or read the transcript, scheduled to be posted today, or listen below:

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Burning Faith 0

Asia Times tries to provide some context for the killings in Afghanistan that have been so loudly linked to Christianist crackpot Terry Jones’s Quran burning.

It’s a long and dense article.

Nevertheless, I recommend following the link above as a means for getting beyond the navel-gazing of the U. S. news media. Even if the article has only a piece of the picture, it shows that there’s a lot more to this than the actions of the bile-filled leader of an obscure Christian hate group.

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Facebook Frolics: Recommended Reading Dept. 0

Roger Chesley, writing in the local rag, has some hints for using social networks safely.

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No Way Out 0

Bill Maher:

If Bachmann and Palin get in, that’s two bimbos.

And then there’s Mitt Romney, the millionaire, and Newt Gingrich, a professor.

We just need a skipper and a buddy and we’ve got ‘Gilligan’s Island.’

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Twits on Twitter 0

From OhMyGov:

Researchers Feng Chi and Nathan Yang, both of the University of Toronto, recently authored the report “Twitter Adoption in Congress.” According to the report’s abstract, the main objective is “to determine whether successes of past adopters have the tendency to speed up Twitter adoption, where past success is defined as the average followers per Tweet – a common measure of ‘Twitter success’ – among all prior adopters.”

Chi and Yang, using the 111th Congress as their model, are seeking to determine whether the relative success of a veteran tweeter (think Barack Obama, who has been online since 2007) has influenced others to join up, and in turn led those newer tweeters to gain followers and inspire yet another wave. This is a classic domino effect theory in some ways, except it is strictly limited to 140 characters and somehow involves Michelle Bachmann and Dennis Kucinich.

Twits, indeed.

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QOTD 0

Dwight D. Eisenhower:

I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.

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Death Panels, Texas Style 0

Besides whacking education jobs and trashing university research, the Texas Legislature is considering yet another way to avoid raising even one more precious penny of tax money.

A state Senate subcommittee on Medicaid spending is offering its own final solution:

Let people die.

Our very own death panel voted last week against adding $23 million in lifesaving medications for poor Texans with HIV, essentially turning away the 2,000 new patients who will need help in the next two years.

It is difficult to comprehend to callousness of the Republican Party–so difficult that most avert their eyes, refusing to notice that their talk of “fiscal responsibility” masks abandoning the concept of the public good in every way possible.

Follow the link.

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Geography Lessons 1

One of the folks who frequents the Linux Questions forums has this in his signature:

War is how Americans learn geography.

Which leads into Clarence Page’s comments on the rebellion in the Ivory Coast, where the newly elected president is being prevented from taking office by his predecessor:

He (Gbagbo–ed.) was voted out of office on Nov. 28, but decided not to leave. International election observers, the United Nations and the African Union agree that his opponent, Alassane Ouattara, won and they want Gbagbo to go. Yet, Ouattara has been relegated to operating a government-in-exile in a hotel circled by tanks, razor wire and a U.N. force.

Unlike the situation in Libya, Ouattara has had a fairly disciplined rebel force on his side, waging a war to unseat Gbagbo at a cost of at least 400 lives and as many as a million refugees.But that’s not enough for the Ivory Coast to get much news coverage or attention in the United States. It is the Ivory Coast’s misfortune to have little strategic value to America or our allies, except perhaps as the world’s top cocoa producer.

Follow the link to find out what’s going on there and why, even though the Ivory Coast does not pump oil, it’s important.

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Twits on Twitter 0

OMG it’s tribal:

Following pop stars on Twitter is clearly a brilliant way to pass the time. How else are we supposed to know that Craig David is off to the gym to “fine tune the physique … lol” or that Taio Cruz has “had a couple weeks of no shades wearing”? It collapses the barrier between pop star and pop fan, encouraging dialogue (mainly things like, “@onedirection OMG Harry if you don’t follow me back I’ll cry 4ever, plz RT”) and gives the pop star (or his/her record label) access to millions of fans that can be crowd-sourced in no more than 140 characters.

Recently, that dialogue has been enhanced by the creation of so-called Twitter tribes, a way for fans to pledge allegiance to their favourite pop star and feel part of their world without having to part with a £30 annual fee for a badge and photocopied autograph. Nowadays, it’s all about deciding whose side you’re on, and hashtagging like your life depends on it.

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One Born Every Minute Dept. 0

Seen at my local apothecary:

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God Spake in Elizabethan English 0

John Timpane, writing at Philly dot com, considers the influence of the King James Version of the Bible in a fascinating little column. I didn’t know, for example, that, despite its introduction, it was never actually “authorized” by King James, though he “commissioned” the project.

A nugget:

We human beings often use our most beautiful things to poison our world. I hope we are not doing that now. Think of the KJV, created as a compromise between tradition and the needs of a young faith. Its creators, wary and weary of sectarian strife, hoped it could bring peace, lead the faithful to the God they sought.

It has done that in millions of lives – and in some of the most sublime English ever written. But a particular way of reading it has been made into ground zero by those who can’t stand others not belonging to their church. Or party.

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Contract on America 0

In the Chicago Tribune, Megan Crepeau describes the Republican bait-and-switch:

For example, the 2010 Republican “Pledge to America,” the standard with which all Republican candidates marketed themselves, is conspicuously absent of the big two hot-button social issues: gay rights and abortion. Apart from two vague references to “life,” nothing in their agenda indicated the current onslaught on women’s health. Never mind that direct federal intervention in women’s lives — and raising taxes along the way — goes directly against the kind of limited government principles that got them elected. This was a sneak attack, and a hypocritical one at that.

Read the whole thing.

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Clip Joint 0

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